The Wizardwar (13 page)

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Authors: Elaine Cunningham

BOOK: The Wizardwar
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A victory that, in Basel’s opinion, was perhaps a little too timely and convenient. Perhaps it was time to shake the lord mayor’s tree and see what fell out.

An hour later, Basel Indoulur lifted his goblet and beamed at his host. “To the hero of the hour, master of storm elementals. The spell components for that grand feat must have cost a small fortune! But no sacrifice is too great for Halruaa, and other songs by the same minstrel.”

Procopio Septus pretended to drink his wine and tried not to glare at his visitor over the goblet’s rim. Try as he might, he couldn’t decide what to make of Basel’s visit. The portly conjurer-with his jovial airs and obvious love of good living-was, on the face of things, an easy man to dismiss. However, those who followed Halruaan politics knew him to be a fair, even wise ruler of the city of Halar. Many wizards, particularly of the conjuration school, owed their training to Basel Indoulur. He was never without at least three apprentices. Procopio marveled that Basel had not yet replaced Tzigone, the troublesome little wench whose contributions to the recent battle had carried far higher a cost than any Procopio had incurred.

In fact, Procopio had known nothing but gain from the recent invasion. Scandal had dogged him in the months since Zephyr, his elven jordain, had been executed as a traitor and a collaborator of the magehound Kiva. After Procopio’s successes in the Mulhorandi invasion, this had been all but forgotten. The people of Halarahh stood solidly behind their lord mayor, proud of his magical feats and military success. More than one wizard had come to him quietly, hinting that perhaps the king was not quite what he once had been, subtly suggesting that perhaps it was time for a man of Procopio’s talents to come into his own.

Yet Procopio could not forget that he had achieved these heights through a number of hideously illegal actions. He searched Basel’s round face for any hint of a smug, knowing smile. Was it his imagination, or did those twinkling black eyes hold a malevolent gleam?

“You are not here solely to drink my health,” he said bluntly.

Basel placed a hand over his heart, pudgy fingers splayed. His expression of contrition looked genuine. “You are weary of speaking of your victories. I should have realized this, knowing you for a modest man. Forgive me, but yes, I came here laden with questions. I have always found there to be much confusion in the aftermath of battle.”

Procopio heard the warning in these words. Though Basel might be an odious little toad at present, years ago he’d earned a name as a competent battle wizard. He was subtly waving his own colors, reminding Procopio that he had the experience to see what others might miss.

The diviner rose. “I will show you something that may answer many of your questions.”

He led his visitor to his gaming room. Here stood several tables, each with a different elaborate terrain representing historic battlegrounds. He went to the table that depicted the mountainous northern region known as the Nath, the site of his victory against the Crinti.

A word from Procopio sent hidden drawers around the table springing open. Thousands of tiny, animated figures leaped from the drawers and hurled themselves into battle.

Tiny skyships floated above a valley filled with miniscule warriors engaged in fierce hand-to-hand combat. Streaks of colored lightning darted from the miniature skyships. Basel’s eyes widened as they settled upon a tiny ship with gaudily colored sails, upon which were painted voluptuous winged elves in a rather advanced state of undress.

“Yes, that is indeed your Avariel,” Procopio assured him. “You see before you the battle we recently shared. With these tables, these toys, I can reenact battles again and again, testing different strategies and scenarios. Over the years I have learned much.”

Procopio took a wand from his belt and waved it over the table. Some of the figures melted away, and others took their place. Many of the warriors were tiny, gray females.

“Crinti,” he affirmed, noting Basel’s thoughtful nod. “They have been a particular interest of mine. No one else, to my knowledge, has made such a study of the shadow amazons.”

“So your knowledge of the Crinti rose from your interest in war games?”

“None of my choices are entirely random, my dear Basel,” Procopio said, punctuating his words with a patronizing smile. “You forget that I am a diviner. It is my art to see what another man does not.”

His words, like Basel’s, held a subtle warning. The foolish conjurer chuckled and slapped Procopio on the back, as if he were congratulating an old friend on a jest well told.

“So you keep telling me,” he said with jovial humor. “It’s a fine position you find yourself in. If no one else can see all these mysteries you keep hinting of, who could possibly dispute your claims?”

Procopio responded to the teasing with a faint smile, but he could not bring himself to give more than terse responses throughout the rest of the conversation. Finally his lack of cordiality pierced even Basel’s well-padded armor, and the portly nuisance took himself off to bedevil another.

The diviner went immediately to his study, clenching in one hand a bright yellow bead from the end of one of Basel’s ubiquitous braids. A simple spell had coaxed it free, and another had brought it to Procopio’s hand. With this personal item, he would make short work of finding out Basel’s secrets.

Procopio spent the rest of the afternoon in mounting frustration, studying his scrying globes for something he might use against his foe. Basel Indoulur was remarkably free of enemies, even grudges. Procopio brought up images, one after another, of the conjurer’s former apprentices. A smile came to each face when Procopio subtlety nudged thoughts of their former master into their minds. It was the same with Basel’s servants, his city officials, his fellow wizards. It seemed that none of Basel Indoulur’s acquaintances had anything against him but Procopio himself.

Inspiration struck. Procopio gathered his own animosity into a single, focused energy. This he sent into a blue-black globe, soaring out across all Halruaa to seek its own reflection. When the globe began to clear, and a scene to play before him, a slow smile spread across the diviner’s face.

Impossible though it might seem, there was another who hated Basel even more than he did.

 

 

In the aftermath of any victory, there is mourning as well as celebration. Much of Halruaa’s grief found voice in grand and solemn ritual, but all across the land, private tears were shed, and silent oaths made.

One of the most beautiful old villas in all Halarahh was the Belajoon family estate. Ancient and sprawling, it was home to four generations of wizards and several family branches. As did most Halruaan buildings, this villa held it shares of secrets.

In a chamber far below the oldest mansion on the estate, an old man knelt before a glass vault. In it lay his greatest treasure, his young and adored wife Sinestra. She was dead-killed not in battle but by mysterious magic.

Guilt mingled with Uriah Belajoon’s grief. He was well beyond his prime, and his name would never be included among the ranks of Halruaa’s great wizards. Other than his wealth and his absolute devotion, he had little to offer a woman such as Sinestra. But there were other wealthy men in Halruaa, and Uriah had noted well how many a man’s eyes followed Sinestra. He had given her a protective charm, a gem that would bring her directly home if any other man should touch her.

Home she had come. Uriah had found her in their bed, her too-still face strangely changed. He knew her, though, from the ring she wore and by small hidden marks that he hoped only he might recognize.

Sinestra’s death had revealed a startling secret: her beauty had been lent her by magic. This Uriah had never suspected. Granted, he was not the most powerful of wizards, but Sinestra had been his apprentice, and he’d never sensed unusual strength in her gift. The wizard who’d molded Sinestra’s face into that of a goddess must have possessed a level of Art beyond Uriah’s comprehension.

Perhaps Uriah’s lack of wizardly skill had killed her! Perhaps his small, protective spell had turned a greater wizard’s brew into poison. This thought tormented him until he could no longer bear it.

He hauled himself to his feet and went off in search of an Inquisitor, a specially trained wizard attached to the temple of Azuth. Few wizards were as adept at ferreting out the origins of spells as was a magehound.

Before dark he returned with a tall, thin man whose petulant expression left little doubt concerning his opinion of this errand. Uriah suspected the man would not have come at all but for the reputation of the Belajoon clan. The magehound expected lavish compensation, but that expectation didn’t improve his opinion of his benefactor.

Uriah was long past caring how other Halruaans measured him. He led the man to Sinestra’s tomb and left him to do his work. He lingered at the far corner of the chamber, however, watching intently as the magehound cast his spells of inquiry.

The expression on the magehound’s face turned from impatience to incredulity. Finally he lowered his silver-and-jade wand and turned to Uriah.

“I have grave news indeed.”

The old wizard steeled himself to hear that his spell, his ineptitude, had caused the death of his beloved Sinestra.

“There is a spell upon your wife so that another man’s touch will return her to your side.”

Uriah confirmed this with a single nod.

“The man who touched her was Lord Basel Indoulur.”

For long moments, wizard and magehound regarded each other, neither quite able to take in the truth of this. Finally emotion began to rise in Uriah’s heart. There was fear-for Basel Indoulur was a noted conjurer-but fear paled before his fury. With his anger came a murderous resolve.

“You are certain of this?”

His voice was steady, grim. A wary expression-a shadowy version of respect-entered the magehound’s eyes.

“Beyond doubt. What would you have me do with this knowledge?”

The old wizard considered. He would avenge Sinestra, of that he was certain. The problem was his utter lack of ideas concerning how to proceed!

He took a heavy, gold chain from around his neck and handed it to the magehound. “For now, keep this knowledge close. When the time comes, I will call upon you to bring inquisition. You, and no other.”

The magehound’s eyes flashed with ambition. In these uncertain times, Halruaans searched for traitors in every well and under every bed. If he could deliver as powerful and canny a wizard as Basel Indoulur to judgment, his fame would be assured!

He inclined his head to Uriah, favoring the minor wizard with a bow usually exchanged only between men of equal rank and power.

“As you say, Lord Uriah, it will be done.”

The wizard waited until his guest left, then flung himself upon the curved dome of Sinestra’s tomb and wept. Each tear watered his hatred of Basel Indoulur. Surely an opportunity to strike would come, even to a man such as he! If it did not, he would find a man who had greater power and a better chance of success.

His Sinestra was dead. One way or another, Basel Indoulur would pay.

Chapter Seven

A band of warriors followed a small, green-clad wizard, a half-elven woman who moved through the swampy jungle like a cat. They followed closely, their faces grim and their eyes constantly scanning for some new danger.

In the canopy overhead, a bird loosed a burst of maniacal laughter. The peeping of hidden tree toads brought to mind a bevy of malevolent sprites, tittering behind tiny hands as they plotted mischief. A prowling jungle cat-a clanish creature more cunning and deadly than a mountain wolf-roared out an invitation to hunt. From the surrounding forest one feline voice after another picked up the refrain until the very trees seemed to vibrate in time with the death-promising song.

The largest man in the group, a distant cousin to the wizard, threw down his machete. “Only fools enter the Swamp of Akhlaur, be there a laraken here or not!”

The half-elf stopped and turned. Despite her diminutive size, she possessed an aura of power that froze the fighters in mid-step. like her men, she showed signs of hard travel in sweltering heat. Her black hair hung in limp strands around slightly pointed ears, and her large, almond-shaped eyes were deeply shadowed in a gaunt and heat-reddened face.

“Do you call me a fool, Bahari?” she said with deceptive calm.

He stared her down. “Thirty of us entered this place. Seventeen remain. How many more need to die?”

Her chin lifted, and her dark eyes narrowed. “I gave my wizard-word oath.”

“I’m sure your father’s wife was very impressed by this,” he sneered. “You are quick to serve a woman who despises you.”

The half-elven wizard turned away. “I would not presume to know Lady Charnli’s heart. Nor should you.”

“I know her better than I want to. No matter how this ends, she’s not likely to reward either of us, and shell never thank you.”

The wizard shrugged and turned her attention to the path ahead. The jungle vines grew thick, and enormous, softly glowing green flowers nodded amid the tangle. One of the flowers, a large but tightly furled bud, tossed and bucked wildly, as if it contained a frantic bird struggling to free itself from a soft-shelled egg. Muffled peeping came from within the flower.

The wizard raised her machete and carefully sliced the flower from its stem. A tiny, golden monkey tumbled out, flailing and shrieking. She dropped her machete and caught the little creature, then jerked back her hand with a startled oath as the monkey sank its needlelike teeth into her thumb. Off it scuttled, scolding the half-elf as if she had been the source of its misery all along.

Bahari lifted a sardonic eyebrow in silent comment on the nature of gratitude. He retrieved his machete and hers from the jungle floor and handed her one with a courtly bow-a mockery of the proud Halruaan family that excluded them both.

With a hiss of exasperation, the half-elf turned her attention back to the flowering vines. The lovely plants were carnivorous and grew where carrion was in great abundance. Oddly enough, only a few bones were entwined among the vines.

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